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Paperback
Published: 23rd January 2024
Paperback
Published: 4th January 2023
Paperback
Published: 15th June 2023
The Madness: A Memoir of War, Fear and PTSD
By (Author) Fergal Keane
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
23rd January 2024
6th July 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Trauma and shock
Psychiatric and mental disorders
True war and combat stories
News media and journalism
616.8521
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
260g
An Irish Times book of the year 2022
A powerful, probing book about PTSD.
As a journalist Keane has covered conflict and brutality across the world for more than thirty years, from Rwanda, Sudan, South Africa, Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine and many more. Driven by an irresistible compulsion to be where the night is darkest, he made a name for reporting with humanity and empathy from places where death and serious injury were not abstractions, and tragedy often just a moments bad luck away.
But all this time he struggled not to be overwhelmed by another story, his acute complex post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition arising from exposure to multiple instances of trauma experienced over a long period. This condition has caused him to suffer a number of mental breakdowns and hospitalisations. Despite this, and countless promises to do otherwise, he has gone back to the wars again and again.
Why
In this powerful and intensely personal book, Keane interrogates what it is that draws him to the wars, what keeps him there and offers a reckoning of the damage done.
PTSD affects people from all walks of life. Trauma can be found in many places, not just war. Keanes book speaks to the struggle of all who are trying to recover from injury, addiction and mental breakdown. It is a survivors story drawn from lived experience, told with honesty, courage and an open heart.
Praise for The Madness
Keane has not just the courage to risk death so that the most important stories can be told, as well as the eye to tell them with vivid subtlety, but also the humility to reveal the havoc that this task visits on the beholder Spectator
A brutally honest exploration of what motivates Keane to keep reporting on atrocities despite the toll on his mental health Gentle but unflinching Guardian, Book of the Day
The Madnessis engaging without resorting to sensation. Fluent prose follows the decline of the political situation and of Keanes own mental health in chilling, compelling detail Observer
Fergal Keane opens doors into closed places. He lets us look inside those complex compartments where fear, anxiety, anger and panic lurk, and he tells a story of being afraid all of his life beautifully written This is an important book Irish Times
Fergal Keanes torments might be as nothing compared to the sufferings he has observed, and his work can do nothing to alleviate those sufferings, but what chance is there of any restitution, no matter how inadequate it may be, without witnesses to the crimes of the truly guilty TLS
The Madness is a heady reckoning with trauma, adrenaline and that mixture of moral courage and compulsion that drives the news cycle, Fergal Keane tells difficult, sometimes horrible truths about the world, but it is the truths he finds about himself that make this book a necessary read Annie Enright
A really important piece of work Susanna Reid, on Good Morning Britain
An immensely brave book Tortoise
'Powerful, and heartbreaking Audrey Magee
The Madness is an extraordinary, captivating account of one man's journey in search of truth, as he excavates the human story from chaos Elaine Feeney
Fergal Keane was born in London and educated in Ireland. He is one of the BBC's most distinguished correspondents and an award-winning broadcaster and author. He has reported for the corporation from Northern Ireland, South Africa, Asia and the Balkans. He has been awarded a BAFTA, been named reporter of the year on television and radio, winning honours from the Royal Television Society and the Sony Radio Awards, most recently for his Radio 4 series Taking a Stand. Keane has won the George Orwell prize for literature, the James Cameron Prize and the Edward R. Murrow Award from the US Overseas Press Association. He is the author of a number of bestselling books including Letter to Daniel and his memoir All of These People. He lives in London with his wife and two children.